The written record of the tribes is from their meeting with the Lewis and Clark expedition (September 5, 1805). They also appear in the records of the Catholic Church at St. Louis to which they sent four delegations to request missionaries (or "Black Robes") to minister to the tribe. Their request was finally granted and a number of missionaries including Peter De Smet, S.J., were eventually sent. The tribes negotiated the Treaty of Hellgate with the United States in 1855. Under the terms of the treaty the tribes agreed to be resettled on the current Flathead Reservation pending a survey to see if the Bitteroot Valley was not a more suitable location (Article XI). As the survey was never conducted, a band of Salish under Chief Charlot refused to relocate, and held out in the Bitterroot Valley until 1891.
The tribe has about 6,800 members. 4,000 tribal members currently live on the Flathead Reservation and 2,800 tribal members live off the reservation. 1,100 Native Americans from other tribes and over 10,000 non-Native Americans also live on the reservation. As the first to organize a tribal government under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1936 they are governed by a tribal council. The tribal government offers a number of services to tribal members and is the chief employer on the reservation. The tribes operate a tribal college, the Salish Kootenai College (SKC) and a heritage museum called "The People's Center" in Pablo, MT. The tribes own and jointly operate a valuable hydropower dam called Kerr Dam as well as the Best Western KwaTaqNuk Inn in Polson, Montana.
The Tribal Council represents eight districts.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation".
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